David Hammond > David's Quotes

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  • #1
    Jack London
    “You can't wait for inspiration. You have to go after it with a club.”
    Jack London

  • #2
    Milan Kundera
    “The stupidity of people comes from having an answer for everything. The wisdom of the novel comes from having a question for everything. When Don Quixote went out into the world, that world turned into a mystery before his eyes. That is the legacy of the first European novel to the entire subsequent history of the novel. The novelist teaches the reader to comprehend the world as a question. There is wisdom and tolerance in that attitude. In a world built on sacrosanct certainties the novel is dead. The totalitarian world, whether founded on Marx, Islam, or anything else, is a world of answers rather than questions. There, the novel has no place.”
    Milan Kundera, The Book of Laughter and Forgetting

  • #3
    Joseph Campbell
    “Once we have broken free of the prejudices of our own provincially limited ecclesiastical, tribal, or national rendition of the world archetypes, it becomes possible to understand that the supreme initiation is not that of the local motherly fathers, who then project aggression onto the neighbors for their own defense. The good news, which the World Redeemer brings and which so many have been glad to hear, zealous to preach, but reluctant, apparently, to demonstrate, is that God is love, the He can be, and is to be, loved, and that all without exception are his children. Such comparatively trivial matters as the remaining details of the credo, the techniques of worship, and devices of episcopal organization (which have so absorbed the interest of Occidental theologians that they are today seriously discussed as the principal questions of religion), are merely pedantic snares, unless kept ancillary to the major teaching. Indeed, where not so kept, they have the regressive effect: they reduce the father image back again to the dimensions of the totem. And this, of course, is what has happened throughout the Christian world. One would think that we had been called upon to decide or to know whom, of all of us, the Father prefers. Whereas, the teaching is much less flattering: "Judge not, that ye be not judged." The World Savior's cross, in spite of the behavior of its professed priests, is a vastly more democratic symbol than the local flag.”
    Joseph Campbell, The Hero With a Thousand Faces

  • #4
    Gabriel García Márquez
    “This was when she asked him whether it was true that love conquered all, as the songs said. 'It is true', he replied, 'but you would do well not to believe it.”
    Gabriel García Márquez, Of Love and Other Demons

  • #5
    Salman Rushdie
    “What kind of idea are you? Are you the kind that compromises, does deals, accomodates itself to society, aims to find a niche, to survive; or are you the cussed, bloody-minded, ramrod-backed type of damnfool notion that would rather break than sway with the breeze? – The kind that will almost certainly, ninety-nine times out of hundred, be smashed to bits; but, the hundredth time, will change the world.”
    Salman Rushdie, The Satanic Verses

  • #6
    Milan Kundera
    “In times when history still moved slowly, events were few and far between and easily committed to memory. They formed a commonly accepted backdrop for thrilling scenes of adventure in private life. Nowadays, history moves at a brisk clip. A historical event, though soon forgotten, sparkles the morning after with the dew of novelty. No longer a backdrop, it is now the adventure itself, an adventure enacted before the backdrop of the commonly accepted banality of private life.”
    Milan Kundera, The Book of Laughter and Forgetting

  • #7
    Alfred Lansing
    “No matter what the odds, a man does not pin his last hope for survival on something and then expect that it will fail.”
    Alfred Lansing, Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage

  • #8
    Jeffrey Eugenides
    “Everyone struggles against despair, but it always wins in the end. It has to. It's the thing that lets us say goodbye.”
    Jeffrey Eugenides, Middlesex

  • #9
    Nevil Shute
    “She looked at him in wonder. "Do people think of me like that? I only did what anybody could have done."
    "That's as it may be," he replied. "The fact is, that you did it.”
    Nevil Shute, A Town Like Alice

  • #10
    Oliver Sacks
    “Dr. P. may therefore serve as a warning and parable -- of what happens to a science which eschews the judgmental, the particular, the personal, and becomes entirely abstract and computational.”
    Oliver Sacks, The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales

  • #11
    David  Mitchell
    “Faith, the least exclusive club on Earth, has the craftiest doorman. Every time I've stepped through its wide-open doorway, I find myself stepping out on the street again.”
    David Mitchell, Cloud Atlas

  • #12
    Herman Melville
    “The term 'Savage' is, I conceive, often misapplied, and indeed, when I consider the vices, cruelties, and enormities of every kind that spring up in the tainted atmosphere of a feverish civilization, I am inclined to think that so far as the relative wickedness of the parties is concerned, four or five Marquesan Islanders sent to the United States as Missionaries might be quite as useful as an equal number of Americans despatched to the Islands in a similar capacity.”
    Herman Melville, Typee: A Peep at Polynesian Life

  • #13
    David Foster Wallace
    “Boo, I think I no longer believe in monsters as faces in the floor or feral infants or vampires or whatever. I think at seventeen now I believe the only real monsters might be the type of liar where there's simply no way to tell. The ones who give nothing away.”
    David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest

  • #14
    David Foster Wallace
    “It's so nice to be able to end a sentence with a preposition when it's easier.”
    David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest

  • #15
    Daniel Kahneman
    “The confidence that individuals have in their beliefs depends mostly on the quality of the story they can tell about what they see, even if they see little.”
    Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow

  • #16
    Daniel Kahneman
    “A reliable way of making people believe in falsehoods is frequent repetition, because familiarity is not easily distinguished from truth.”
    Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow

  • #17
    “He doesn’t know to want for more because nothing in his life has been as much as this...on that night he thinks that no one has ever had so much and only later will he know he should have asked for more.”
    Ann Patchett, Bel Canto

  • #18
    John Steinbeck
    “Sometimes a man wants to be stupid if it lets him do a thing his cleverness forbids.”
    John Steinbeck, East of Eden

  • #19
    John Steinbeck
    “Look now -- in all of history men have been taught that killing of men is an evil thing not to be countenanced. Any man who kills must be destroyed because this is a great sin, maybe the worst we know. And then we take a soldier and put murder in his hands and we say to him, "use it well, use it wisely." We put no checks on him. Go out and kill as many of a certain kind or classification of your brothers as you can. And we will reward you for it because it is a violation of your early training.”
    John Steinbeck, East of Eden

  • #20
    John Steinbeck
    “It is one of the triumphs of the human that he can know a thing and still not believe it.”
    John Steinbeck

  • #21
    Anthony Burgess
    “Destruction, best expressed in this age in which I write as terrorism, is truly there for its own sake, but the pretense of religion or secular patriotism converts the destructive into the speciously creative.”
    Anthony Burgess, Any Old Iron

  • #22
    John Cotton Dana
    “His is one of those cases which are more numerous than those suppose who have never lived anywhere but in their own homes, and never walked but in one line from their cradles to their graves. We must come down from our heights, and leave our straight paths for the by-ways and low places of life, if we would learn truths by strong contrasts; and in hovels, in forecastles, and among our own outcasts in foreign lands, see what has been wrought among our fellow-creatures by accident, hardship, or vice.”
    John Cotton Dana

  • #23
    Richard Henry Dana Jr.
    “A dozen men are shut up together in a little bark upon the wide, wide sea, and for months and months see no forms and hear no voices but their own, and one is taken suddenly from among them, and they miss him at every turn. It is like losing a limb. There are no new faces or new scenes to fill up the gap. There is always an empty berth in the forecastle, and one man wanting when the small night-watch is mustered. There is one less to take the wheel, and one less to lay out with you upon the yard. You miss his form, and the sound of his voice, for habit had made them almost necessary to you, and each of your senses feels the loss.”
    Richard Henry Dana Jr., Two Years Before the Mast: A Sailor's Life at Sea

  • #24
    Stacy Schiff
    “Ancient history is oddly short on incorrect omens.”
    Stacy Schiff, Cleopatra: A Life

  • #25
    Barbara Kingsolver
    “So one time when I was working in this motel one of the toilets leaked and I had to replace the flapper ball. Here’s what it said on the package; I kept it till I knew it by heart: ‘Please Note. Parts are included for all installations, but no installation requires all of the parts.’ That’s kind of my philosophy about men. I don’t think there’s an installation out there that could use all of my parts.”
    Barbara Kingsolver, The Bean Trees

  • #26
    David Foster Wallace
    “And then now a very strange argument indeed ensues, me v. the Lebanese porter, because it turns out I am putting this guy, who barely speaks English, in a terrible kind of sedulous-service double-bind, a paradox of pampering: viz. the The-Passenger’s-Always-Right-versus-Never-Let-A-Passenger-Carry-His-Own-Bag paradox. Clueless at the time about what this poor little Lebanese man is going through, I wave off both his high-pitched protests and his agonized expression as mere servile courtesy, and I extract the duffel and lug it up the hall to 1009 and slather the old beak with ZnO and go outside to watch the coast of Florida recede cinematically à la F. Conroy. Only later did I understand what I’d done. Only later did I learn that that little Lebanese Deck 10 porter had his head just about chewed off by the (also Lebanese) Deck 10 Head Porter, who’d had his own head chewed off by the Austrian Chief Steward, who’d received confirmed reports that a Deck 10 passenger had been seen carrying his own luggage up the Port hallway of Deck 10 and now demanded rolling Lebanese heads for this clear indication of porterly dereliction, and had reported (the Austrian Chief Steward did) the incident (as is apparently SOP) to an officer in the Guest Relations Dept., a Greek officer with Revo shades and a walkie-talkie and officerial epaulets so complex I never did figure out what his rank was; and this high-ranking Greek guy actually came around to 1009 after Saturday’s supper to apologize on behalf of practically the entire Chandris shipping line and to assure me that ragged-necked Lebanese heads were even at that moment rolling down various corridors in piacular recompense for my having had to carry my own bag.”
    David Foster Wallace, A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again: Essays and Arguments

  • #27
    Anna  Hammond
    “Well, sure, maybe religion serves a purpose, but maybe religion’s role is not to give us the answers, but to give us the questions, not to resolve the mystery of life, but to increase our wonder at the things we don’t know.”
    Anna Hammond, Fomatsu

  • #28
    Edith Wharton
    “The worst of doing one's duty was that it apparently unfitted one for doing anything else.”
    Edith Wharton, The Age of Innocence

  • #29
    Carson McCullers
    “The people dreamed and fought and slept as much as ever. And by habit they shortened their thoughts so that they would not wander out into the darkness beyond tomorrow.”
    Carson McCullers, The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter

  • #30
    Carson McCullers
    “She spoke and he could not understand. The sounds were distinct in his ear but they had no shape or meaning. It was as though his head were the prow of a boat and the sounds were water that broke on him and then flowed past. He felt he had to look behind to find the words already said.”
    Carson McCullers



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